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Electric actuators add speed, precision to pallet-layer former

A prototype development project for a maker of conveying and pallet-forming equipment has led to a whole new line of electric actuators for applications in food and beverage industries.

Alignment conveyor. The ARB alignment conveyor segment uses 16 ERD electric actuators to activate rollers on the belt to align moving packages in pallet layers.
Alignment conveyor. The ARB alignment conveyor segment uses 16 ERD electric actuators to activate rollers on the belt to align moving packages in pallet layers.

Intralox, a leading global supplier of conveying systems, was looking to improve the speed and precision of its ARB Pallet Layer Former S7000 unit. Pneumatic cylinders did not provide enough flexibility, and early electric solutions were not suitable for washdown applications. A collaborative product development effort led to the design of a fully enclosed electric actuator that reduced maintenance and improved the palletizing unit’s performance and precision. This prototype was the basis for the ERD actuator from Tolomatic, Inc., designed as a cost-effective replacement for pneumatic cylinders, especially in washdown applications.

Intralox’s palletizing unit features the company’s Activated Roller Belt™ (ARB™) technology, which only moves containers linearly but has the ability to move them either left or right, turn them around, or sort them to a specific location in a pallet layer. The conveyor belt is able to do this thanks to actuators located in zones beneath the moving belt that activate longitudinal rollers in the ARB, making them rotate left or right. As a package passes over a diversion zone, for example, the actuators beneath the belt rotate pinions that cause the longitudinal rollers in the belt to rotate as they pass over, moving the container laterally by a predefined amount. Any given 10-foot section of the ARB may contain 8 to 16 actuators, depending on the complexity of the application. With this arrangement, packages can be pushed a few degrees right or left, make a complete 90-degree turn, or anything in between as they move along the belt.

In the past, Intralox used pneumatic cylinders to activate the pinions beneath the belt, but they could only provide fixed increments, meaning there was less flexibility in what the ARB could do. Going to an in-house-designed electric actuator solution allowed more precise movements of the actuators and provided more flexibility in diverting, sorting and turning of containers. However, the in-house actuator proved to be less than a total solution.

“We originally were making our own custom-designed ball screw with another vendor,” said David Marsh, senior electrical controls engineer with Intralox. “It was essentially just an open ball screw driven by a stepper motor. Because the ball screw was unprotected, it required more maintenance and was not well suited to washdown applications in food and beverage—one of our largest markets. Tolomatic came in and said they could build us a better solution, so they took what we had and made it better.”

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